Crime & Safety
Minimum Security Inmates On Walkaway Status: NH DOC
Breaking: NHSP, corrections officials are asking for help finding Gordon Apostolas and Clifford Gagnon who have been missing since Friday.
CONCORD, NH — The New Hampshire Department of Corrections is asking for the public’s help in finding two minimum security inmates who have been missing from the Calumet Transitional Housing Unit since last week, according to a press alert. Gordon Apostolas, 54, pictured left, was placed on escape status after reportedly failing to return to his housing unit after reporting to work on Sept. 22, 2017. He was last seen at the corner of Lake and Union streets in Manchester.
Editor’s Note: This post was derived from information supplied by the Concord Police Department. It does not indicate a conviction. This link explains the name removal request process for NH Patch police reports.
Clifford Gagnon was placed on walkaway status on Friday night after allegedly failing to return to the Calumet after leaving his place of employment at just before 10 p.m. (For more information on this and other neighborhood stories, subscribe to Concord NH Patch to receive daily newsletters and breaking news alerts.)
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Gagnon is white, about 74-inches tall, weighs 200 lbs., and has brown hair and brown eyes. He has multiple tattoos all over his body including both hands and his left palm.
Gagnon was sentenced to 5 to 10 by the Strafford County Superior Court for first-degree assault in December 2013.
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Apostolas is white, 71-inches tall, and weighs around 300 lbs. He has brown hair and hazel eyes. Apostolas has multiple tattoos on his body including a tear near his left eye.
Apostolas is serving multiple sentences out of Hillsborough County Superior Court including two counts of duty to inform and possession of crack cocaine. He was admitted to prison in January and was eligible for parole in August 2018.
The New Hampshire State Police and the New Hampshire Department of Corrections Investigations Bureau is investigating both men and are asking anyone with information to call local law enforcement agency or the New Hampshire State Prison at 603-271-1801.
Credit: NH DOC.
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